114 Ky. 912 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1903
Opinion or the court bt
— Affirming.
The appellant, Noah Reynolds, and J. C. Reynolds were jointly indicted by the grand jury of Letcher county, charged with the willful murder of William S. Wright. The case was transferred, by a change of venue, to Bell county. The trial of appellant by a jury in the Bell circuit court resulted in his conviction and his being sentenced to confinement in the penitentiary for the term of his natural life. His motion for a new trial having been overruled, he prosecutes this appeal.
Appellant, by his counsel, urges several objections of small importance, we think, to the court’s action in reference to the admission of, and refusal to admit, certain evidence. These various objections bave no meritorious foundation, and, after a careful examination, we are not willing to say that tbe substantial rights of appellant were injured by tbe court’s rulings upon the questions involved.
There'are always arising, in a ease like this questions of the relevancy and competency of evidence, which lie along the debatable line of the rules of evidence, of which
Appellant complains of instruction No. 5, which relates to the right of self-defense. His objection is that it required the jury to believe that, at the time of the shooting, appellant or J. C. Reynolds really was in imminent danger of great bodily harm at the hands of William S. Wright, instead of being apparently so; and he cites, in support of this objection, the cases of Cockrill v. Commonwealth, 95 Ky., 23, 15 R., 328, 23 S. W., 659. The instruction under discussion is very readily distinguished from that involved in the case cited.' Instruction No. 5,, if it contained only the language which appellant’s counsel quote in their brief, would be inimical to the principle of the Cockrill case; but, if all the instruction is considered, every substantial right of self-defense to which appellant was entitled is found to be carefully preserved. Said instruction is as follows: “Although the jury may believe from the evidence, beyond a reasonable doubt, that the defendant, in Letcher county, and before the finding of the indictment in this case, shot and killed deceased, yet if they believe from the evidence that at the time defendant shot and killed deceased the deceased was then and there about to do him or the said John Reynolds some great bodily harm, and that to shoot deceased was necessary, .or seemed to the defendant to be necessary, in the
Appellant also complains that, under the evidence in this case, he was entitled to the instruction authorized by the case of Oder v. Commonwealth, 80 Ky., 32, 4 R., 18. We freely admit that there was evidence in this case to have warranted the court in giving the instruction authorized in the case cited, if the principles enunciated therein can be upheld either in reason or on authority. The instruction in the case of Oder v. Commonwealth is as follows : “If 'the jury shall believe from all the evidence that, previous to the time of the killing, the deceased, Yolney Hall, lay' in wait for the defendant, and menaced and threatened to kill him, and attempted violence upon his person with a deadly weapon, or did any or either of them, then he had the right to consider the same in determining whether he was in danger of losing his life or of suffer
We freely agree with the language of the court in this case, in so far as it asserts that, in giving the instruction
Appellant further complains of the closing speech of the Commonwealth’s attorney. We have examined this speech carefully, and we do not believe that it contains anything which would warrant us’ in reversing this case. Some of the statements are exaggerated; some of the conclusions are overdrawn; but there is some evidence tending to support every statement made; and while the speech in question is florid in style, and quite zealous in seeking a conviction of appellant, on the whole we can not say it is substantially out of the line usually adopted by the Commonwealth’s attorneys in criminal cases.
The evidence fully warranted the conclusion the jury reached. The killing of William S. Wright by appellant .and his brother, John C. Reynolds, was admitted. The theory of appellant, that William S. Wright rode up behind him and his brother, who were walking along the road, each with a Winchester rifle in his hand, and that the deceased, seeing them thus armed, himself on horseback, with his pistol in a holster under his vest, attracted their attention by calling them vile names and telling them he was going to kill them — attacked them, under these circumstances, without first drawing his pistol — is a proposition which staggers even credulity itself. Every man of any experience is bound to know that it is exceedingly difficult, while mounted upon a restive horse, to use a pistol with any degree of accuracy; and for one mounted on a horse thus to attack two men on foot, each armed with a repeating Winchester rifle, would be, practically, to commit suicide. The jury heard this story of appellant, and they
For these reasons the judgment is affirmed.